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Corona virus, Port and the AFL. Part 4.

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The number of people coming forward for their first COVID-19 vaccine in Adelaide’s northern suburbs has not increased despite efforts to boost lagging jab rates, with parts of the region not forecast to hit 80 per cent double dose vaccination until the end of the year.
The latest federal government figures, correct as of Sunday, show the northern suburbs of Playford and Salisbury are at 56 and 63.6 per cent fully vaccinated for over-16s.


That’s compared to a statewide double-dose vaccination average of 70.6 per cent, with 83.8 per cent of South Australians over the age of 16 having received at least one dose of a vaccine.Salisbury is edging closer to the 80 per cent single dose milestone, with 79.5 per cent in the area having come forward for a jab. Playford is around five points behind at 74.3 per cent single dosed.

Yet the percentage of over-16s in Playford to receive a first dose increased by only 3.8 points this week, marginally down on the 4.2 and 4.5 point increases the area recorded in the two weeks before. Similarly, Salisbury only recorded a 3.1 point growth in first dose vaccinations – its lowest-ever recorded weekly increase and well down on its previous average first dose growth of 3.61 points per week.

More positively, the number of fully vaccinated residents in Playford and Salisbury grew by 4.7 percentage points, the largest increase recorded in both areas since the federal government began publishing local government area vaccination data on August 27.

According to updated projections from South Australian data scientist Ben Moretti, Playford is now on track to reach the 80 per cent double-dose milestone on January 2 – five days earlier than his model’s previous projections, but still more than five weeks after the state reopens its borders on November 23.
Offer a free pack of durries with every jab and then see those numbers skyrocket.
 

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My daughter was one of first to get jabbed due to her employment. She’s about to book in for her booster. . She has 2 children under 5.
 

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A more significant question is whether it's a good idea, when you have no medical qualifications, to do your own research instead of listening to medical experts? The answer is no.

I clicked a few random studies and most of them came up with no result, e.g. not statistically significant that the treatment was effective.

According to this website, you can pretty much treat covid symptoms with anything and it'll work pretty good. Vitamin C, vitamin D, probiotics, horse paste, bleach (probably). People read this sh*t and go I dont need to take a vaccine, if I get covid I'll just take a couple of aspirin, a vitamin D pill and shoot up some ivermectin and be right.

To believe this sh*t you have to believe that governments around the world are actively surpressing these "highly effective" treatments in some sort of global vaccine conspiracy.

These treatments are LESS EFFECTIVE, and less tested than vaccines which are already out. Yet people are going to forego getting a vaccine because they did their own research, despite having a room temperature IQ, and heard on the interwebs that Joe Rogan said ivermectin is the way to go. It's absolutely ******* bizarre. Logically you have to be some sort of conspiracy theorist to buy into it. Oh we don't want a vaccine that has been administered to literally billions with no ill effect, instead I want some random combination of drugs that a study in Mexico said was 28% effective at reducing death, but the results haven't been replicated.

When the clinical trials conclusively prove what is an effective treatment, that's what people will get. That's how medicine works.

Also who are these looney posters that pop out of the woodwork in the middle of the night and are never seen before or after, but just are really passionate about horse paste?

NO DEAL X


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The way the government has handled this opening is shambolic. Set the date too early for no reason whatsoever so will look dumb as **** when we get to 23/11 and double dose 16+ is at 76% pissing everyone who is weary of opening up off, set the next target too high for easing restrictions (NSW already has lower restrictions than us) pissing everyone who wants to open up off, not requiring mandatory vaccinations like every other state thereby creating a legal minefield for businesses so pissing their traditional small business base off. In one deft swoop they have pissed everyone off, provided no leadership and direction and as such will lose the next election big time. All labor has to do is sit back and watch the implosion. Iol
 
The way the government has handled this opening is shambolic. Set the date too early for no reason whatsoever so will look dumb as fu** when we get to 23/11 and double dose 16+ is at 76% pissing everyone who is weary of opening up off, set the next target too high for easing restrictions (NSW already has lower restrictions than us) pissing everyone who wants to open up off, not requiring mandatory vaccinations like every other state thereby creating a legal minefield for businesses so pissing their traditional small business base off. In one deft swoop they have pissed everyone off, provided no leadership and direction and as such will lose the next election big time. All labor has to do is sit back and watch the implosion. Iol

I hope you're right but not sure about that..

The conservative approach your state has taken has been quite popular.

I don't think any state government will lose their future elections during this. State oppositions have no chance during a pandemic.

The only election that's a 50/50 call right now and slightly in favour of the opposition is federally at the moment.
 
Interesting article in InDaily the other day about projected vaccination rates by LGA. 30 SA Local Government Areas will not reach the 80% double dose vaccination target when SA re-opens its borders on 23 November.

LGA's that will not reach the 80% target by then are not just the regions or northern suburbs but large chunks of metropolitan Adelaide including the Tea Tree Gully, Onkaparinga, West Torrens, Charles Sturt and Port Adelaide-Enfield Council areas.

Screen Shot 2021-11-09 at 10.28.11 am.png
Projected double-dose vaccination rates for each South Australian LGA on November 23, with areas below 80 per cent in orange and those above in blue (Graph: Ben Moretti).


 

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The number of people coming forward for their first COVID-19 vaccine in Adelaide’s northern suburbs has not increased despite efforts to boost lagging jab rates, with parts of the region not forecast to hit 80 per cent double dose vaccination until the end of the year.
The latest federal government figures, correct as of Sunday, show the northern suburbs of Playford and Salisbury are at 56 and 63.6 per cent fully vaccinated for over-16s.

Area’s been a problem for yonks. Periodic measles outbreaks and the like.
 
Interesting article in InDaily the other day about projected vaccination rates by LGA. 30 SA Local Government Areas will not reach the 80% double dose vaccination target when SA re-opens its borders on 23 November.

LGA's that will not reach the 80% target by then are not just the regions or northern suburbs but large chunks of metropolitan Adelaide including the Tea Tree Gully, Onkaparinga, West Torrens, Charles Sturt and Port Adelaide-Enfield Council areas.

View attachment 1276944
Projected double-dose vaccination rates for each South Australian LGA on November 23, with areas below 80 per cent in orange and those above in blue (Graph: Ben Moretti).



****ing lol. Now do correlation with highest education level.
 
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